Posts Tagged ‘Workers Defense Project’

Austin: Workers Memorial Day in the Capitol Rotunda | Workers Defense Project

Friday, April 22nd, 2011
April 28, 2011
11:30 amto1:00 pm
WORKERS MEMORIAL DAY:  THE SOUND OF JUSTICE
Thursday, April 28 · 11:30am – 1:00pm
Texas State Capitol Rotunda
1100 North Congress Avenue
Austin, TX
On March 2, we marched to the capitol with 138 coffins commemorating the 138 workers that died on the job in construction in 2009 to tell state legislators that Texas workers deserve better.

On April 28 we bring the struggle right to their office doors.

Join Workers Defense Project as we commemorate Workers Memorial Day by taking action inside the state capitol. Meet us at the rotunda as we unite in song and fill the building with a musical reminder of elected officials commitment to ensuring safe working conditions for the people that build Texas. After a short performance on the rotunda floor, musicians and workers will disperse throughout the building door-to-door to give reminders on the bills we are pushing for this session to ensure workers are treated fairly. Together we will fill the halls of the capitol with the sound of justice.

For more information on Workers Defense Project:
http://www.workersdefense.org/

About Workers Memorial Day:

Each year, thousands of workers are killed and millions more are injured or diseased because of their jobs. On April 28th communities across the country unite to commemorate their lives.Workers Memorial Day was first observed in 1989.

TxLAW note:  The AFL-CIO has urged local unions to commemorate Workers Memorial Day.  As far as we know, no union local in Austin has planned any events.  We salute Workers Defense Project/Proyecto Defensa Laboral for doing so.  
 

Austin: Spirited Pro-Choice and Pro-Union Rallies | Alice Embree | The Rag Blog

Saturday, March 5th, 2011

Our TSEU union sister and CodePink member, Alice Embree, celebrates the intersection of rallies on two crucial issues. And why does an anti-war website publish this stuff? Well, readers no doubt have no trouble figuring that out: another intersection, war, U.S. imperialism, repression of unions and workers and women and children in Iraq and Afghanistan, money spent on war, not on jobs and education; and sending our working class young people to kill and be killed.

http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/alice-embree-spirited-austin-rally-is.html

Hundreds of pro-choice demonstrators marched down Congress Ave. in Austin Saturday, Feb. 26 (above), and then joined with supporters of Wisconsin workers for an enthusiastic rally on the steps of the Texas state Capitol. Photos by Terry DuBose / The Rag Blog.
Rallies at Texas state Capitol:
Pro-choice demonstrators join
supporters of Wisconsin workers

See more photos below.

By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / February 28, 2011

AUSTIN — Two spirited demonstrations took place in front of Austin’s state Capitol on Saturday, February 26th. The Austin American-Statesman failed to cover the pro-choice rally and carried two paragraphs on the second Austin rally in a larger AP story on nationwide events supporting Wisconsin workers.

Hundreds of demonstrators showed up at noon at the south steps of the Capitol to defend women’s reproductive rights and later marched down Congress Ave. Speakers from Planned Parenthood, Whole Women’s Health, National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) Texas, the Lilith Fund and CodePink addressed the crowd. Pink was prominent and bright pink placards read: “I Stand with Planned Parenthood,” “Don’t take away my birth control,” “Don’t take away my breast exams.” Four of CodePink’s Pink Police led the march decked out with their crime prevention badges.

The crowd was mostly young and mostly female. Chanting: “Women’s rights under attack. What do you do? Stand up, fight back!” and “Not the church, not the state, we’re the ones who ovulate.” Placards were both informative and inflammatory. A homemade sign read: “Keep your Boehner out of my uterus.” One woman had lettered: “Get your laws off my body” on her exposed belly. Another woman had constructed a box around her lower body that read: “Think outside my box.”

Marchers split off from the south steps of the Capitol and went down the sidewalks on both the east and west side of Congress, trading sides at Sixth Street as the two lines returned. Passers-by honked and returned peace signs and fists. It was an impressive turnout, organized primarily with word spread through Facebook and listserves.

In some ways, just as impressive was the decision by the pro-choice demonstrators to march up the sidewalk to the Capitol steps and join a 2 p.m. rally organized by MoveOn.org in support of Wisconsin workers. DPS troopers attempted to block the newcomers, but union advocates welcomed them.

A crowd of about 1,000 listened to music led by Bill Oliver and friends. Texas Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett addressed the crowd, as did former Texas Agricultural Commissioner and populist pundit, Jim Hightower. Austin’s demonstration was one of many throughout the country and coincided with the largest turnout in Madison to date. More than 70,000 demonstrators gathered in Madison despite freezing temperatures.

Hightower said: “You are the Koch brothers’ worst nightmare.” The reference is to conservative donors Charles and David Koch who made huge contributions to conservative candidates in the last midterm elections and who, according to Reuters, “are playing an influential role in the drive to strip public employee unions of their rights to bargain in several U.S. states.”

Wisconsin’s newly elected Governor Walker returned the funding favors with over $100 million in tax breaks to corporations in January before he named teachers and public workers in his state as the cause of Wisconsin deficits.

This was the second mobilization by Austin union supporters in one week. A demonstration organized by the AFL-CIO attracted hundreds to the south steps of the Capitol on Monday night.

Austin’s teachers’ union, Education Austin, is calling for a large turnout at the AISD School Board meeting on Monday evening, February 28, where layoffs and school closures are on the agenda. It seems that the aggressive actions of conservatives who feel empowered by midterm elections are prompting nationwide mobilizations to defend rights ranging from the right to collective bargaining to family planning.

On a related front, the Workers Defense Project is convening a march and rally to commemorate the 138 workers who lost their lives while working at Texas construction sites. The March 2 event, a “Day of the Fallen,” begins at 3:30 p.m. at the federal building and ends at the Capitol.

[Alice Embree is a long-time Austin activist and organizer, a former staff member of The Rag in Austin and RAT in New York, and a veteran of SDS and the women's liberation movement. She is active with CodePink Austin and Under the Hood Café. Embree is a contributing editor to The Rag Blog and is treasurer of the New Journalism Project.]

Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Terry DuBose / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Terry DuBose / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Terry DuBose /The Rag Blog.

Austin: Report Back from the U.S. Social Forum

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010
August 19, 2010
7:30 pmto9:00 pm
Texas State Employees Union sponsors a report back from the USSF with a labor perspective.
 
In June, thousands of social justice activists met in Detroit at the USSF to discuss, plan, and organize the struggle for a more just, equitable, and sustainable world. It was the second of these vibrant, cross-issue social change gatherings. Those of us from TSEU were inspired by seeing so many labor union groups all through the event–UAW, Teamsters, Steelworkers, AFSCME, United Electrical Workers, AFT, etc., etc.
 
In what we hope will be one of many USSF programs, members of the Texas State Employees Union, CWA Local 6186, will host a gathering to hear reports from Austinites who attended this important and inspiring event.  Our presenters will focus on labor in various ways.  There will also be a slide show and video clips.
 
TSEU is at 1700 S. 1st St., Austin (across from Freddie’s & Jovita’s)
 
 

 Those making reports include:

Anne Lewis, a TSEU activist, who will show clips from a presentation she made to the US Social Forum about Anne Braden, a most dedicated fighter against racism and political repression.

Josefina Castillo and Judith Rosenberg of Austin Tan Cerca de la Frontera, which organizes solidarity and support for workers in Mexico organizing inside and outside of unions

Leslie Cunningham, a TSEU activist, who will report on the role of labor unions in the social justice movement

Maribel Falcon of Workers Defense Project/Proyecto Defensa Laboral, which is having great success on wage theft and construction safety issues in Austin as part of the labor movement which is larger than unions alone.

Carmen Llanes with PODER in East Austin, who will report on environmental justice organizing.

For more information, contact Will Rogers at 280-7549 or [email protected]

On Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/?sk=events#!/event.php?eid=104604479596477

Domestic workers union marches at USSF (photo by Jim West, Labor Notes)

Bill Fletcher, author of Solidarity Divided, speaks in Austin

Friday, March 19th, 2010
March 28, 2010 7:00 pmtoMarch 29, 2010 7:00 pm
Bill Fletcher, Jr., longtime labor, racial justice and international activist, makes 2 public presentations in Austin March 28 and 29.  He is coauthor of Solidarity Divided, the Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path Toward Social Justice.

Bill Fletcher, Jr., coauthor of Solidarity Divided, speaks in Austin March 28 and 29

Sunday evening, March 28, 7 pm, at St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. UT professor Robert Jensen will interview Fletcher onstage, questioning him about the social justice movements that have been the focus of his life and work. What lessons about today’s crises can we draw from Fletcher’s experience in the struggle for racial and economic justice, at home and abroad?  Sponsored by: Third Coast Activist Resource Center, MonkeyWrench Books, and Workers Defense Project.  Free (suggested donation of $10 for Austin People’s Community Center).  St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church is at 14311 Wells Port Drive (1 block west of IH-35 on Wells Branch Parkway).

Monday evening, March 29, 7 pm, National Association of Letter Carriers Br. 181 union hall, 601 Williams St. (off N. Lamar near Airport). Bill directs his remarks at union members and friends.  What are the challenges we face?  How can we help lead a resurgence of the labor movement as part of the broader social justice movement?  Be ready with your questions and plenty of opportunity for discussion.  Sponsored by the Austin Central Labor Council, NALC Branch 181, and Pro-Care Spine & Medical Center.  (Free; door prize; light refreshments start at 6:45 pm.)

Bill Fletcher, Jr., is Director of Field Services & Education for the American Federation of Government Employees and has been a fighter for workers rights, racial justice, and international causes for decades.  He has worked for the AFL-CIO, SEIU, UAW, and National Postal Mail Handlers Union.  He is Executive Editor of The Black Commentator, past president of the Trans-Africa Forum, founder of the Center for Labor Renewal and of the Black Radical Congress, and is a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies.  Bill co-authored Solidarity Divided with Fernando Gapasin, and co-authored a provocative article, “Reimagining Socialism” with Barbara Ehrenreich.

Thanks to Professor Bob Jensen for bringing Mr. Fletcher to Austin.